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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Umbilical swellings and discharges are frequently seen in paediatric practice. Whereas the diagnosis of umbilical
hernia
and the much rarer conditions of exomphalos and gastroschisis should not be problematic, urachal and vitello-intestinal tract remnants that require surgery may resemble the common umbilical granuloma, which may be treated with
silver
nitrate. A comparison is made of the features of cases that required admission to the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, for umbilical problems from 1973 to 1985, inclusive. A diagnostic protocol to assist the attending primary care physician is suggested.
...
PMID:Clinical diagnosis of umbilical swellings and discharges in children. 377 30
A randomized control study was performed on 24 patients to evaluate the effect of a new drainage system. Two types of drains were used: electrified and the conventional corrugated rubber drains. All of the 24 patients had an incisional
hernia
repair operation. In 12 patients, the wound was drained with an electrified drain (ED) and in the other 12 by the conventional drain (CD). The ED consisted of a corrugated rubber drain to which 2
silver
-
silver
chloride electrodes were fixed. The wounds were drained for the first 3 post-operative days during which antibiotics were given. A peroperative and daily swab from the wound was taken during the time of drainage and for 4 days thereafter, and cultured. For evaluation, a pathogen count of less than 10(5) colony-forming units per ml of discharge from wound cultures was considered as successful drainage, while counts above this level were defined as failures. Drainage failure occurred in 4/12 patients (33%) of the CD group. Pathogens encountered were Streptococcus pyogenes, Staphylococcus aureus and albus and P. aeruginosa. Manifestations of wound inflammation occurred in 2 of the 4 patients. The appropriate antibiotic was given to the 4 patients after culture and sensitivity tests were performed. Drainage failure did not occur in any of the ED group. Post-operative laboratory assessment of blood count, liver and kidney functions and serum electrolytes recorded insignificant changes against preoperative values in both groups. The results demonstrate the superiority of the ED over the CD. The electric field produced by the ED seems to be lethal to organisms. The ED is simple, safe and cost-effective.
...
PMID:The electrified drain. A new device for sterilizing the field of drainage. 817 69
Colonic inertia, total or segmental, is a known cause of constipation, yet its etiology is poorly understood and its treatment not satisfactory. Although the colonic electric activity has been studied by many investigators, the colonic pacemakers that are assumed to generate the electric waves, are scarcely addressed and their location, to our knowledge, has not been determined. The current communication investigates the possible sites of the colonic pacemakers, aiming at a better understanding of the mechanism of colonic motility and its disorders, notably colonic inertia. The tests were performed during the repair of huge incisional
hernia
in 12 subjects (mean age 37.7 +/- 10.2 years, 7 women). Monopolar
silver
-
silver
chloride electrodes were applied to the terminal ileum (TI) and cecum (C), and to the ascending (AC), transverse (TC), descending (DC) and sigmoid colon (SC); they were fixed by electrode gel to the ileal and colonic serosa. The electric activity of each of the TI, C, AC, TC, DC and SC was recorded. Electric waves in the form of slow waves or pacesetter potentials and action potentials were recorded from the TI and colon. Differences in the frequency, amplitude and conduction velocity of the waves occurred between the TI and the various segments of the colon. The change in the wave variables between the TI and C occurred at the ileocecal junction, between the C and AC at the cecocolonic junction, the AC and TC at the mid third of the TC and the DC and SC at the colosigmoid junction. The colonic electric waves are suggested to be generated by at least 4 pacemakers, which are presumably located at the ileocecal junction, the cecocolonic junction, the mid third of TC and at the colosigmoid junction. The electric waves appear to be responsible for conducting the colonic motor activity. We postulate that disordered colonic pacemakers may produce segmental or total colonic inertia, a proposition that needs further investigation.
...
PMID:Electrophysiologic identification of the location of the colonic pacemakers. A human study. 1181 99
We recently defined the sites of four colonic pacemakers that appear to generate the electric waves assumed to be responsible for the colonic motility. We hypothesized that a dysfunction of one or more of these pacemakers might interfere with the generation of electric waves and the colonic motility. This hypothesis was investigated in the current communication. The tests were performed during the repair of huge incisional
hernia
of 8 subjects (5 F, 3 M; mean age 42.8 +/- 3.3 SD years). Two electrodes were applied to each of the terminal ileum (TI), cecum (C), and ascending (AC), transverse (TC), descending (DC), and sigmoid (SC) colon. The electric activity of the TI and the various colonic segments was recorded using surface
silver
-
silver
chloride electrodes applied to the colon. The site of change of the wave variables between the TI and the C and between the different other colonic segments was determined by changing the position of the electrodes placed over the segments to be examined. Presumably, the sites where the wave variables changed represent the potential location of the pacemakers. We anesthetized these sites individually by injection of 2% Xylocaine, and then recorded the electric activity after 20 min in all the subjects and after 2 h in only 5 subjects. Electric waves in the form of pacesetter and action potentials were recorded from the TI and the colon. The sites of potential pacemakers could be defined at the ileocecal and cecocolonic junctions, at the mid third of the TC, and at the colosigmoid junction. Anesthetization of the cecal pole resulted in disappearance of the cecal electric waves, with persistence of the waves from the other colon segments. Anesthetization of the cecocolonic junction eliminated the electric waves of the AC and the right half of the TC, while the waves in the rest of the colon persisted. The remaining two pacemaker sites produced similar results when anesthetized. The electric waves reappeared after the anesthetic effect had waned. Thus, the colon possesses at least four pacemakers that appear to mediate the colonic motor activity. Individual pacemaker block by anesthetization effected disappearance of electric waves in the relative colonic segment, which reappeared after waning of the anesthetic effect. The disappearance of these waves upon pacemaker anesthetization supports a relationship between the pacemakers at the anesthetized site and the electric waves. The electric waves seem to be generated by these pacemakers. We suggest that colonic inertia, segmental or total, results from the dysfunction of one or more pacemakers, and that an artificial pacemaker could be applied for the treatment of such conditions. These suggestions need to be further studied.
...
PMID:Electrophysiologic identification of the location of the colonic pacemakers in humans: further study. 1452 87
Billroth (1878) envisaged prostheses before Bassini's sutured cure (1887). Phelps (1894) reinforced with
silver
coils. Metals were replaced by plastic (Aquaviva 1944). Polypropylene (Usher 1962), resisting infection, became popular. Usher instituted tensionless, overlapping preperitoneal repair. Spermatic cord was parietalized, to obviate keyholing. Stoppa (1969) championed the sutureless Cheatle-Henry approach encasing the peritoneum. His technique, "La grande prosthese de renforcement du sac visceral" (GPRVS), was adopted by laparoscopists. Newman (1980) and Lichtenstein (1986) pioneered subaponeurotic positioning. Kelly (1898) inserted a plug into the femoral canal; Lichtenstein and Shore (1974) followed. Gilbert (1987) plugged the internal ring, and Robbins and Rutkow (1993) treated all groin herniae thus. Incisional herniation has been controlled by prefascial, retrorectus prosthetic placement (Rives-Flament 1973). ePTFE (Sher et al. 1980) is useful intraperitoneally, since it evokes few adhesions. Here, laparoscopy (Ger 1982) is competitive. Beginning in 1964 (Wirtschafter and Bentley), experimental and clinical studies have shown herniation may be associated with aging and genetic or acquired (smoking, etc.) systemic disease of connective tissue. These data, with prospective trials, all but mandate tensionless prosthetic repair.
Hernia
2004 Feb
PMID:Milestones in the history of hernia surgery: prosthetic repair. 1458 74
Although mesh use is important for effective herniorrhaphy in adults, prosthetic infections can cause serious morbidity. Bacterial adherence to the mesh is a known precursor to prosthetic infection. We compared the ability of common mesh prosthetics to resist bacterial adherence. The meshes studied included polypropylene (Marlex, expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) with and without
silver
chlorhexidine coating (DualMesh Plus and Dualmesh) composite meshes (Composix E/X, Proceed, and Parietex Composite) and lightweight polypropylene meshes (TiMesh, Ultrapro, and Vypro). Fifteen samples of each mesh type were individually inoculated with a suspension of 10(8 )methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in tryptic soy broth. After incubation at 37 degrees C for 1 h, the mesh pieces were then removed and serially washed. The colony-forming units (CFU) of MRSA present in the initial inoculum, at the end of the 1-h warm-water bath (broth count), and the pooled washes (wash count), were determined using serial dilutions and spot plating. The bacteria not accounted for in the broth or wash counts were considered adhered to the mesh. Samples of each mesh type were also analyzed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Data are presented as the mean percentage adherence with ANOVA and Tukey's test used to determine significance (P<0.05). The DualMesh Plus mesh had no detectable MRSA in the broth or the pooled wash samples. Dualmesh had less adherence compared with Marlex, Proceed, and Vypro (P<0.05). Conversely, Vypro had a statistically higher adherence (96%, P<0.05) as compared to TiMesh, Ultrapro, Composix E/X, and Parietex Composite. SEM confirmed bacterial adherence to all the mesh types except DualMesh Plus. The ability of a biomaterial to resist infection has an important clinical significance. DualMesh Plus, due to its antimicrobial coating, is the only mesh type of the nine tested that demonstrated a bactericidal property. Standard PTFE (Dualmesh) also had less bacterial adherence. Vypro demonstrated an increase in bacterial adherence; this was possibly due to the multifilament polyglactin 910 weaved within the prolene component of the mesh.
Hernia
2006 Apr
PMID:In vitro infectability of prosthetic mesh by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. 1645 77
Amniotic fluid (AF) is a potential source of biomarkers for many disorders which may occur during pregnancy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the place of two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DE) technologies to compare AF in both normal and pathological situations. Two-dimensional fluorescence difference gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE; Ettan DIGE) as well as two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and
silver
staining followed by image analysis were used. Differentially expressed proteins were identified by mass spectrometry. This approach was used to study electrophoregrams of normal AF obtained at 17 weeks of gestation and at term, as well as AF from fetuses presenting with congenital diaphragmatic
hernia
. Finally, the potential of two-dimensional electrophoresis was assessed by studying the protein profile of plasma containing AF proteins in a model of premature rupture of the membranes (PROM). Our results clearly show that two-dimensional electrophoresis technologies still have place for analyzing biological fluids such as AF.
...
PMID:Proteomic analyses of amniotic fluid: potential applications in health and diseases. 1718 92
The antimicrobial,
silver
/chlorhexidine, when impregnated on mesh has been demonstrated to resist mesh infection in in vitro and in vivo models. The clinical, human systemic response to intraperitoneal placement of
silver
/chlorhexidine-impregnated mesh has not been investigated to date. Between October 2002 and November 2004, all in-patients undergoing laparoscopic ventral hernia repair were retrospectively analyzed. All repairs used expanded polytetraflouroethylene (ePTFE) Dual Mesh (DM) or ePTFE impregnated with
silver
/chlorhexidine, Dual Mesh Plus (DM+). Patient demographics,
hernia
characteristics, mesh type, operative details, and hospital course data were collected. Noninfectious fevers were defined as a temperature greater than 100.4 F without an identified source. Standard statistical methods were used. During the 2-year study period, 120 patients underwent laparoscopic ventral hernia repair (DM = 55, DM+ = 65). The two groups were similarly matched in terms of age, body mass index, American Society of Anesthesiologists score, defect size, and mesh size. Postoperative fever without an identified source occurred in 10 (18.2%) patients with DM and in 25 (38.5%) patients using DM+ (P = 0.015). A multivariant analysis revealed that only mesh type and body mass index predicted postoperative fever. All fevers resolved within the first 72 hours in the DM patients; however, 16 per cent of the DM+ group had persistent fevers of unknown origin after 72 hours. Within the DM+ group, patients with postoperative fevers had significantly longer postoperative stays (4.8 days vs 3.0 days; P = 0.009). The use of antimicrobial-impregnated ePTFE mesh with
silver
/chlorhexidine in laparoscopic ventral hernia repair is associated with noninfectious postoperative fever. In our patients, the evaluation and management of these fevers resulted in a significantly longer hospital stay.
...
PMID:Intra-abdominal placement of antimicrobial-impregnated mesh is associated with noninfectious fever. 1721 19
Mesh contraction is a threat for
hernia
repair. Our aim is to analyze the effects of fixation techniques on mesh contraction. Forty-eight rats with abdominal wall defects were equally divided into four groups (G): G1 (control) with no repair, G2 defects were repaired with free polypropylene mesh, and G3 and G4 defects were reinforced with prolene mesh fixed by running and interrupted sutures, respectively. The corners of the defect and prolene mesh were marked with
silver
clips. The contraction rate was calculated by radiological measurement of distances between corner clips and by measuring the mesh areas after harvesting abdominal wall containing the patch. Host reaction was histhopathologically and biochemically examined by inflammation score, fibroblast count, thickness of the granulation tissue, and tissue hydroxyproline level. Distances between corner clips and mesh area have decreased by 31.5% and 26.4% respectively in G2, while in G3 the decrease was 24.4% (p = .008) and 22% (p = .01), respectively. Granulation tissue thickness was highest in the group with mesh fixed by running suture. The tissue hydroxyproline levels were similar in mesh repair groups. Our study suggests that mesh contraction, which reduces mesh surface, occurs during the wound healing process. In order to decrease the contraction rate, it is important to keep the mesh in place until its incorporation into the surrounding tissue. Our results suggest that mesh contraction is minimized by suture fixation, and running fixation suture, which provides more balanced tension around the mesh, seems more beneficial for decreasing contraction rate.
...
PMID:The role of suture fixation on mesh contraction after abdominal hernia repair. 1928 14
A 10-month-old Chinese boy presented with delayed motor development for seven months. Blood and biochemistry investigations revealed no abnormalities. The physical examination showed poor postnatal growth (below -2 standard deviation from the mean at diagnosis), preservation of the occipitofrontal head circumference with delayed closure of the anterior fontanel, a classical triangular facial phenotype, asymmetry of the lower extremities and other characteristic features that fulfil the diagnostic criteria of
Silver
-Russell syndrome clinically. As PubMed and web searches revealed no similar findings, we believe that this may be the first case of
Silver
-Russell syndrome with linea alba
hernia
and pes varus reported in China, and possibly the world. The genetic deficit responsible for this case is still under investigation.
...
PMID:The first case of Silver-Russell syndrome accompanied by linea alba hernia in China. 2020 Jul 65
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